Tippett v. State

278 S.W.2d 110, 224 Ark. 981, 1955 Ark. LEXIS 512
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 11, 1955
Docket4802
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 278 S.W.2d 110 (Tippett v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tippett v. State, 278 S.W.2d 110, 224 Ark. 981, 1955 Ark. LEXIS 512 (Ark. 1955).

Opinion

Ward, J.

Appellant, Leroy Tippett, was charged with and convicted for the crime of murdering his wife, allegedly committed on June 11, 1954. The jury returned a verdict of first degree murder without recommendation, and the court thereupon sentenced appellant to death.

Appellant who was about 38 years of age lived with his wife and three children in the country approximately 4 miles west of West Helena. He was employed at the Pekin Wood Products Company in West Helena where he had worked for approximately 9 years. After finishing his work on the date above mentioned, which was a Friday, and after receiving his weekly pay check appellant, as was his custom, went to Helena for the purpose of buying groceries. While there he also spent some time looking at an automobile which resulted in his arrival at home about 6:30 or 7:00 o ’clock in the evening. Apparently because of appellant’s late arrival at home an argument took place between him and his wife which finally resulted in appellant inflicting several serious wounds on the head and body of his wife followed by her death about 9:00 P.M. of the same day and some thirty minutes after she was taken to a hospital.

The evidence clearly shows that appellant’s wife had approximately 27 lacerations on her head, a split lip, a broken left arm, some bruises on her shin and toes, and something like 40 bruises and lacerations on her body. Appellant does not deny that he fought with his wife or that he inflicted some of the wounds on her body. It was and is his contention, in general, however that he was forced to defend himself against his wife who attacked him with a butcher knife, and that he seized the handle off a frying pan and struck his wife on the head, and that he then hit her with a part of a rotten hoe handle to keep her from getting hold of an ax.

Aside from appellant’s objections to the introduction of certain testimony, all of which will be later discussed, he makes the over-all contention that the evidence fails to show the malice and intent to kill which are necessary to sustain a conviction of first degree murder. As an indication of the lack of the intent to kill it is pointed out, generally, that appellant had the means and ample opportunity to kill his wife instantly had he intended to do so. In support of this it is also pointed out that he made an effort to obtain medical aid. In this same connection it is likewise argued that the jury’s verdict must have been the result of bias and prejudice, as indicated by the lack of sufficient proof and the State’s attempt to introduce incompetent testimony.

Testimony introduced by the State was substantially as follows: Dan Crisp, a deputy sheriff of Phillips County, in company with a Mr. Lawhorn, arrived at appellant’s house about 8:15 — apparently some thirty minutes to an hour after the altercation was over — and saw appellant crawling through the weeds near his house. When asked as to the whereabouts of his wife appellant replied ‘ ‘ She is lying over there fooling me, trying to get me in trouble.” Crisp found her unconscious lying on the ground in front of the house, near the edge of the road. “She was bloody all over and her head was cut all to pieces it looked like to me.” An ambulance was called forthwith. The only explanation appellant made was that “something came up about some gi'oceries.” On further examination of the premises that night Crisp found a bloody hoe handle near or under the body which he marked and kept for future identification. At the same time Crisp removed from appellant his pocket knife and shirt, both showing blood stains, and marked them for identification. The following day witness made another examination of the premises and found a heavy stick about three feet long and a piece of iron approximately the same length weighing about three pounds lying near the spot where the body was found, both with blood on them. These were likewise marked for identification, and, together with the other items, were exhibited at the trial. Blood was found in the kitchen and in both bedrooms of the house, and on the bed.

There was testimony by neighbors that the altercation seemed to have lasted something like an hour and that appellant and his ivife had previously engaged in altercations, and that on one occasion appellant, after chasing his wife down the road, caught her and struck her with his hand or fist.

Dr. W. T. Paine treated deceased in the emergency room when she arrived at the hospital. “She was in a coma and shock, she was barely breathing; and she died in 20 or 30 minutes, after oxygen and blood were administered.” He found “multiple” wounds and lacerations on her head — about 15 or 20 — varying from one-half to one inch in length. His opinion was that deceased died from shock and loss of blood caused by the wounds.

The undertaker counted 27 lacerations on the head and neck, and the funeral director found the same 27 lacerations and also about 40 on the back and hips.

Bichard Wilson who lives nearby learned of the altercation and called the police and Mr. Lawhorn. On his way to the telephone he passed appellant’s house and saw appellant trying to flag him to a stop. He did not stop and does not know what appellant’s purpose was. In about 15 minutes he returned to appellant’s house and stayed until the ambulance came.

Appellant’s testimony was to the effect that as soon as he got home, an argument started over his late arrival and his wife “. . . grabbed the butcher knife and 1 catches her left hand with my right hand and pushes it down beside her, she had done struck me with the knife and I says ‘turn loose’ and I hit her and told her to turn the knife loose and she didn’t do it and I reached over on the stove and picked up something and hit her with it and she dropped the knife.” The something appellant picked up was, in his own words, “a little piece off the frying pan.” It is admitted by appellant that his wife did not cut him with the knife. ‘ ‘ Q. That is what you struck her with? A. I hit her right along he re (indicating the head). Q. How many times did yon say you struck her trying to get her to drop the knife? A. No more than twice.” Following this, according to appellant, his wife started to leave the house and he pushed her across the bed in the front room and held her a little while without hitting her until she said “let me loose I am through.” Then as she went out of the door she grabbed a broom and hit at appellant but missed him and broke the handle against the door facing when she said “I am going to get this ax and knock your brains out.” Whereupon, according to appellant, he picked up a piece of rotten hoe handle “and hit her on the head and she walked off and fell.” Appellant testified that he only struck his wife the licks indicated above except that he did hit her with his fist when the argument first started; that he didn’t intend to kill her; that he didn’t know she was seriously hurt; that within a few minutes he stopped a passing car in an effort to secure medical aid; and that if he had wanted to kill his wife he could easily have done so “ in a twinkle. ’ ’

Sufficiency of the evidence. We have carefully reviewed the record in this case and are forced to conclude that there is ample evidence to support the verdict of murder in the first degree.

Appellant’s principal contention is that the testimony introduced by the State fails to show malice and intent to kill on the part of appellant.

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Related

Lisenby v. State
543 S.W.2d 30 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1976)

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Bluebook (online)
278 S.W.2d 110, 224 Ark. 981, 1955 Ark. LEXIS 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tippett-v-state-ark-1955.